Corruption and fraud are not new to Indians, but few expected to find them in the IT-services industry. After all, this is
an industry whose founders are professional entrepreneurs, whose principal customers are the world's leading multinationals,
whose shares are often listed on foreign stock exchanges (as is Satyam's on NYSE), whose profit margins are still among the
fattest anywhere, and whose firms were thought to be at the vanguard of good governance. Indeed "Brand India" was largely
built on the back of the Indian IT sector's reputation
for quality, efficiency and integrity.

As the fourth largest Indian IT firm, Satyam helped create Brand India and also profited from it. Its founder, Ramalinga
Raju, won international awards for leadership and corporate governance. Like other CEOs in his industry, Raju gave generously
to charitable causes, even helping to launch a world-class 911-type emergency service in his home state of 80 million people.
Raju also surrounded himself with blue-chip personalities: His boards, for instance, included the dean of India's leading
private business school, a professor of corporate governance at Harvard Business School, a former President of India, and the
former worldwide managing partner of McKinsey & Co. To top it off, Raju's company took its name from the Sanskrit word for
"truth."

Management experts will spend years trying to understand why Raju's accounting fraud was not discovered sooner by
auditors, directors, ratings agencies or regulators. Local investors seem to have been the first to get a whiff of foul play
because for some time they undervalued Satyam's shares compared to other Indian IT firms. Ironically, Satyam's board and its
auditors were among the last to suspect impropriety.

Financial investors have punished Satyam by dumping its shares and suing its directors and auditors. They will probably
apply a higher risk premium to Indian stocks in the future, an unfortunate outcome for honest Indian companies. And they will
diversify their portfolios and limit exposure to individual Indian companies. There's not much else that they can or should
do.

For instance, U.S. firms may want to revisit the question of which activities form part of their core competencies and
which are peripheral to their mission. IP-intensive or
mission-critical work should not be offshored, or should be done through captive centers in low-cost countries like India
rather than through third-party providers, even if the latter would be cheaper. Even when offshoring to third parties makes
sense, there must be safeguards on data access
and use, and all proprietary data must be housed in U.S. servers. Strategies for dealing with service disruption must be
in place, whether through redundancy in the system or contingency plans for shifting work quickly from one offshore partner
to another (or back home). U.S. firms must also guard against over-reliance on key personnel working for third-party
providers lest they should bolt when their companies implode. U.S. firms can protect themselves against many of these risks
by splitting offshoring contracts among many suppliers in many countries.

While the Satyam episode has raised red flags in CXO offices in the West and revealed the vulnerabilities of the offshoring model, it has also revealed some unexpected sources of systemic stability, at least in the Indian case. For instance, despite Satyam's collapse there was no exodus of talent from the firm and there were no reported cases of serious service disruption. On the contrary, within days after the story broke, twenty of Satyam's senior executives vowed to stay with the firm and go about their daily business. Satyam's rivals also promised not to poach customers or employees.

A final piece of good news is that the Satyam episode has provoked public debate about the proper role of founders, family members, independent directors, and auditors in publicly listed companies. If the scandal leads eventually to better regulations and enforcement of corporate governance rules, there may yet be a silver lining to the Satyam cloud.

Ravi Ramamurti is Distinguished Professor of International Business and Director of the Center for Emerging Markets at Northeastern University. His latest book, Emerging Multinationals in Emerging Markets, is being published by Cambridge University Press (2009).